No cure for being human (and other truths I need to hear)

Kate Bowler

Book - 2021

"We all know, intellectually, that our time on earth is limited. What would we change if we knew it viscerally? Kate Bowler was thirty-five when she was diagnosed with stage IV colon cancer. Now that she's responded to immunotherapy Kate has to figure out how to make a new life between CT scans. Before she got sick, she'd accepted the very American idea that life was an endless horizon of possibilities. Now she has to figure out what to do within the limits of the time she has left. In No Cure for Being Human, Kate, hailed by Glennon Doyle as 'the Christian Joan Didion,' looks at the ways she has tried to wring meaning from her remaining time through anecdotes that range from the hilariously absurd--as when she atte...mpts to rid the hospital gift shop of its copies of prosperity gospel guru Joel Osteen's Your Best Life Now to the seriously painful. Breaking down time into efficient segments--'gather round and watch how this woman can take a solitary moment and divide it into a million uses!'--trying to live in the moment, weighing the meaning of work, and learning to discover what 'enough' feels like, Kate asks one of the most fundamental questions of all: How do we create meaning in our lives as we race against the clock?"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

616.994347/Bowler
4 / 4 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 616.994347/Bowler Checked In
2nd Floor 616.994347/Bowler Checked In
2nd Floor 616.994347/Bowler Checked In
2nd Floor 616.994347/Bowler Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Random House [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Kate Bowler (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xvi, 202 pages ; 20 cm
ISBN
9780593230770
  • Author's Note
  • Preface
  • Chapter 1. Best Life Now
  • Chapter 2. Timekeeping
  • Chapter 3. Pragmatism
  • Chapter 4. Bucket Lists
  • Chapter 5. Yolo (You Only Live Once)
  • Chapter 6. Do What You Love (and the Money Will Follow)
  • Chapter 7. Apocalyptic Time
  • Chapter 8. Befores & Afters
  • Chapter 9. Flesh & Blood
  • Chapter 10. Unfinished Cathedrals
  • Acknowledgments
  • Appendix
Review by Booklist Review

Bowler led a charmed life--a tenure track job at Duke University, nearly perfect marriage, and baby son--until she was diagnosed with stage 4 colon cancer. Her first memoir, Everything Happens for a Reason and Other Lies I've Loved (2018), dealt with the reckoning with possible death and with the saccharine platitudes that people offer. Her scholarly work on the prosperity gospel infuses the pages of this second memoir. What does it mean to "live your best life" when death seems all too close? Bowler observes that bucket lists have become a "new form of experiential capitalism" and ultimately a death-avoidant strategy. As she recounts the labyrinthine road of treatments and surgery, she finds love and joy everywhere, even as despair is never more than a hair's breadth away. Bowler's prose is adept at capturing the dialectic of life's "splendid, ragged edges" showing through. And she's funny, too. This is a gem for cancer patients and their families and for survivors, but really, for anyone who understands the terror and beauty of being human.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In heartbreaking essays, Bowler (Everything Happens for a Reason) recounts lessons learned after being diagnosed with stage four colon cancer at the age of 35. An associate professor at Duke Divinity School, she thought that everyone had limitless choices before receiving the grim diagnosis that pegged her survival odds at 14%: "Hope for the future feels like a kind of arsenic that needs to be carefully administered, or it can poison the sacred work of living in the present." While mourning the loss of a future with her husband and two-year-old son, Bowler enrolled in a clinical trial for a new immunotherapy drug, and, miraculously, was one of 3% of patients to successfully respond to it. After searching her whole life for a "formula for how to live," she writes, "cancer treatment had provided the clearest one of all." Bowler's strong faith is present throughout, though the writing, refreshingly, never feels overtly religious. More than anything, her convictions underscore the importance of living life on one's own terms. "Someday... God will draw us into the eternal moment where there will be no suffering," she writes. "In the meantime, we are stuck with our beautiful, terrible finitude." Those in need of a wake-up call will find it in this breathtaking narrative. Agent: Christy Fletcher, Fletcher & Co. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

In this memoir, Bowler (history of Christianity, Duke Divinity Sch.; Everything Happens for a Reason) talks about receiving a diagnosis of stage-four colon cancer; this begins a series of reflections on the evolution of Bowler's illness and her emotional journey through the ups and downs of responding to cancer. Bowler's affecting narrative meditates on the things she's just faced; she also takes it as an opportunity to reflect on the past and the kind of life she wants for herself in the future. Bowler writes about all of it with good humor, occasional anger, and vivid honesty, when she's discussing remission, the toll of the cancer cure, and the incredible hassle of getting a disability parking permit from Duke because her physician didn't properly write the request. Most poignantly, she talks about dealing with oncologists who aren't straightforward with her about her diagnosis. Through it all, she survives, offering along the way fresh insight on life and chronic illness. VERDICT General readers will be engrossed by this heartfelt memoir of sickness, family, and recovery. The table that serves as an appendix of complicated truths is worth the price of the book.--David Azzolina, Univ. of Pennsylvania Libs., Philadelphia

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A chronicle of grief, hope, and courage. In 2015, when she was 35, Bowler, who teaches the history of Christianity at Duke Divinity School, was diagnosed with stage 4 colon cancer, with a very low chance of survival beyond two years. Years later, she follows her earlier memoir, Everything Happens for a Reason, with wise, wry reflections on living in the face of uncertainty. "The world I thought I knew before the diagnosis was hygienic, predictable, and safe," Bowler writes. Her new world was threatening, uncontrollable, and unstable; her research, writing, and teaching suddenly seemed irrelevant. Often, the medical community made her feel reduced to an integer, quantified and charted. Cancer, she increasingly realized, was a mystery, and repeated visits and scans led to conversations with doctors to discuss what " 'we' are learning" about the illness. Elated that she was one of few candidates for immunotherapy, she enrolled in an arduous clinical study, traveling weekly from her home in North Carolina to Atlanta, where she was infused with harsh, debilitating chemotherapy and immunotherapy drugs. Every cycle of her treatment left her "grateful, weary, and, almost imperceptibly, weaker than the week before"--without knowing if, and when, the treatment would work. Above all, she confronted the daily specter of imminent death. "Everybody pretends that you only die once," she writes. "But that's not true. You can die to a thousand possible futures in the course of a single, stupid life." Bowler debunks the hollow clichés that she has heard too often: to seize the day, live in the present, work on a bucket list. "Facing the past," she counters, "is part of facing the future." Like others who have suffered traumatic loss or illness--especially during the pandemic--Bowler recognizes that "so often the experiences that define us are the ones we didn't pick." A sensitive memoir of survival. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One Best Life Now I was in bed in the surgical wing of Duke University Hospital when the doctor popped his head in the door and smiled apologetically before flicking on the fluorescent lights. It was 4:00 a.m., the end of my second night in the hospital, but no one in a hospital sleeps in the conventional sense. There are only intervals of sleep without rest, interrupted by unfamiliar voices. What's your date of birth? On a scale from one to ten, how would you rate your pain? To this day, if you wake me up from a nap, I will immediately tell you my birthday. I opened my eyes and saw a boyish face. The doctor wore a white coat too large for his frame and his eyes were bleary either from a day that had only begun or from a night that had gone on too long. "Six, sixteen, 1980. June 16." "Right," the doctor said, then paused. "So . . . you're thirty-­five." I nodded, and my eyes began to water. I brushed the tears away quickly. Not the right moment for that now, thank you. "If you keep replenishing my fluids, I'll just keep crying," I explained. "Maybe keep me in a stage of light dehydration for the next few days." The doctor suppressed a laugh and began to riffle through my case history. "The patient has a history of abdominal pain after meals. Significant weight loss. Nausea and vomiting. No ultrasound evidence of gallstones or cholecystitis, but results of hepatobiliary scan led to a surgical consult to remove the patient's gallbladder . . . then you got a CT scan." "No," I corrected. "I yelled at a surgeon for the first time in my life and said that I was not leaving his office without a scan. Then they ordered a scan." This had been the biggest showdown of my life, the doleful surgeon with his arms folded and me loudly demanding some kind of treatment. It had been five months, and I had lost thirty pounds. I was doubled over with the pain. "I can't bear this much longer," I had said, again and again as doctors benignly shuffled me along. The young doctor glanced up at me and then turned back to his notes. "The scan revealed that the liver has multiple focal lesions; the largest are seen within the caudate and right hepatic lobe in addition to several scattered subcentimeter lesions, some are noted within the periphery of the liver and some are subcapsular. The large left transverse colon mass was what created the functional obstruction for you, hence the pain." He looked up at me quickly. "And then there are local regional lymph nodes that are worrisome for early peritoneal carcinomatosis." The heart monitor beeped softly. I cleared my throat nervously. "Um, so, this is my first real conversation since the diagnosis. I mean, I know I had surgery, obviously." Flustered, I tried to start again. "The day before yesterday, a doctor's assistant called me on the phone at work to tell me that I had Stage Four cancer. But I don't know what these terms mean except that it sounds like I am a spaghetti bowl of cancer. People keep saying 'lesions,' " I said. "I haven't had a chance to google it. What are lesions exactly?" "Tumors. We're talking about tumors." "Ohhhhh," I said, embarrassed by another flood of tears. "Right. And are there more than four stages of cancer?" "No." "Okay, so I have the . . . most. The most cancer," I finished lamely. The doctor stood there for a minute, raking his hands through his hair, whatever plans he had for this conversation deteriorating. He lowered himself onto the chair beside the bed but remained bolt upright as if to remind us both that he could leave at any time. The room was warm and stale. A silence folded over us, giving me a moment to look at him more carefully now, his mussy hair and anxious expression, wrinkled coat and brand-­new sneakers. He is too young for this. God, we are both too young for this. "I'd like to ask you some questions, if you don't mind." "By all means." "I'd like to know what my odds are. Of living. I'd like to know if I will live. No one has mentioned that." I kept my voice invitational. I will not shoot this messenger. This is a friendly exchange between interested peers. He paused. "I only know how to answer that by telling you the median survival rate for people who share your diagnosis." "Okay." "Based on the information we have about people with Stage Four colon cancer, the survival rate is fourteen percent," he said and began to scan the room as if looking for a window to climb out of. "A fourteen percent chance of survival," I repeated in a neutral voice. My head felt suddenly heavy as if I were pushing the words up a steep hill. Fourteen percent. Fourteen percent. We lapsed into another silence. The doctor shifted in his seat. He rose to leave, but I reached out, abruptly, to stop him. "Hey!" I said too loudly. "I mean, hey." Startled, he looked down. My hand was closed tightly around his arm like a collar. "It's just . . ." I started again. "You'd better be holding my hand if you're going to say stuff like that." He sat back down and carefully took my hand. I closed my eyes and thought of the last time I was here, in this hospital, holding someone's reluctant hand. It was a maternity nurse. And I could not be reasoned with. "Short inhale! Long exhale!" she had shouted. "Are you laughing or yelling?" A bit of both. But I was waiting for something absolutely wonderful to happen. I opened my eyes. "Okay." I said, letting him go. He stood to leave. "Wait! Wait. Before you go. What does survival mean in this context?" He paused, his expression softening. "Two years," he said. I don't know what he saw, but he took my hand again. "Okay," I said at last. "Okay then." Because I was counting. Two years. 730 days. This new definition of living is glued together by a series of numbers. I would be thirty-­seven years old. I would celebrate my fifteen-­year wedding anniversary. Zach would turn three. I rummage around the things that the nurses had left within reach--­a styrofoam cup of apple juice, peanut butter crackers, an untouched bowl of Jell-­o cubes--­until yes, there. My phone. I pull up the calendar and the calculator for some quick math: two Christmases, two summers, and 104 Thursdays. I sink back into the bed with a long exhale. That is not enough time to do anything that matters. Only small terrible choices now. Just then, Toban tiptoes into my hospital room holding a coffee so protectively that I already know the kind of night he has endured. I stuff the phone under my blankets and smile. Seeing me awake, he smiles back, a little nervously. A newly forming habit. "Did I miss anything?" he asks, coming around to the side of my bed to press his cool palm against my sticky forehead. He frowns. "No," I reply quickly. "There's nothing definite, I mean." He settles into the chair and leans back, closing his eyes. I study him for a long moment. My husband has only ever had three facial expressions on his stupidly handsome face: brooding, sleepy, and what I call "trampoline face" which is the self-­satisfied look of a grown man about to do a flip on a trampoline and hoping everyone will stop what they're doing to applaud. But now I can see we're adding another. Careworn. Excerpted from No Cure for Being Human: (and Other Truths I Need to Hear) by Kate Bowler All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.